e hënë, 14 maj 2007

Arjun MBT Makes a Fighting Come Back Into the Indian Army

Arjun MBT Makes a Fighting Come Back Into the Indian Army


The first batch of 14 Arjun MBTs (Main Battle Tanks), the Defence Research and Development Organisation's flagship weapons system, has been delivered to the Army and they are to be put on reliability analysis in Rajasthan deserts this June.Talking to reporters, who visited the Combat Vehicle Research and Development Establishment (CVRDE) of the DRDO here on Saturday, S. Sundaresh, Director, said that in 2000 the Army had placed orders for 124 Arjun tanks, enough to equip two regiments.Successful TestsIndia Defence has earlier reported about successful trials of the Arjun Tank being carried out by the Indian Army in the first week of May.-- Arjun MBT Unofficial Trials: Indian Army Satisfied With Performance in Rajasthan-- Indian Army Satisfied With Arjun MBTs PerformanceSerial Production FacilitiesThe CVRDE established a Rs. 50-crore facility here to complete delivery of the entire consignment to the Army by July 2009. "We, however, are keen to get orders for another batch of at least 124 MBTs to put the facility to its optimum use," said R. Jayakumar, Additional Director, CVRDE.Earlier, Mr. Sundaresh said Arjun underwent exhaustive field trials before the Army placed the orders. Thermal imaging for nigh-time warfare, high acceleration, mobility and hydro gas suspension were some of the significant features of the totally indigenous Arjun, comparable to all tanks of its class in the world.Factory's progressHighlighting the performance of the factory, Mr. Sundaresh said noteworthy progress had been made in armored patrol car, armored recovery vehicle, self-propelled medium artillery gun and bridge layer tanks. Scientists were working on missile firing capability, advance air defence gun, automatic target tracking and stealth technology such as unmanned drones, which detect and clear mines.Mr. Jayakumar said Arjun was the most tested battle tank in the world, as it had clocked 70,000 km, in addition to about 10,000 trial firings. Major General H.M. Singh, Additional Director in charge of trial and evaluation, said last year's user field trial report had certified that the accuracy and consistency of the weapon system was proved beyond doubt.R. Shankar, Director of Combat Vehicles, DRDO headquarters at New Delhi, said a total of 27 tanks -- 15 pre-production and 12 prototype -- were produced with a budget outlay of a "paltry" Rs. 300 crore. Arjun was the cheapest tank in its class, he said, adding the CVRDE was ready to supply the system to friendly nations if the Government takes a policy decision.

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